A vasectomy is simply the cutting and tying back of the vasa deferentia. The procedure has a failure rate of around 0.1% to 0.2% for the first year. Assuming he and the partner are otherwise normal and do not use any contraception, there is an 85% probability of pregnancy during the same time. So there is roughly a 0.15% chance of pregnancy occurring (in the first year after vasectomy).
zero...
As part of a paternity test it includes a probability value to determine the probability that the man in question is biological father or not. If the probability value is 99.99% and the mother, child and man in question have all been tested then the man is the father. If it is less than that then the man is not the father. It is impossible to get a probability value of 100% unless every man in the world were tested. As it stands a paternity test is as accurate as its probability value. Therefore a paternity test with a probability value of 99.99% has a 99.99% chance of being correct. A paternity test is very accurate and does a great job of showing a childs genetic parents. The test is 99.9% accurate.
The probability of an event is easily calculated by dividing the number of squares that predict the event by the total number of squares. For example, if a man and woman were having a child, and the man was tall with brown hair and the woman short with blonde hair, the probability of the child being, say, tall with blonde hair, would be 1(number of squares with tall/blonde as a result) divided by 4(total number of squares), which is .25, or 25%
Oh, dude, the probability of the next child being a girl is still 50/50. Each birth is like a coin flip - it doesn't matter what came before. So, you could have a dozen girls in a row and the next one could still be a girl. It's all just random chance, man.
The answer will depend on what the disease is.
The options for a man who wants to avoid fathering a child are abstinence from vaginal sex, using codoms, withdrawal or coitus interruptus, and vasectomy. Abstinence is the most effective, followed by vasectomy, condoms, and withdrawal. In addition, a couple may use methods under the control of the female.
the same way a straight man can be a father, by either fathering a child biologically, or adopting.
You should not be able to get pregnant by a man who has had a vasectomy.
No probability. Neither parent has an "A" for the child to inherit to make an "AB".
It is not risky, it is impossible. Men do not become pregnant. A man of that age is perfectly capable of fathering a child.
Being Rh negative has NOTHING to do with fathering a child. Other factors such as sperm count or fecundity of the woman would one of the determining factors.
No, a man who has had a vasectomy will not have semen in his ejaculate. A vasectomy is a permanent form of male contraception that prevents sperm from being present in the semen.
It would interfere with a man's ability to transport the sperm from the seminiferous tubules to the efferent ducts.
A Vasectomy procedure will cost about $1,300 to any man not wanting to have children any longer if the procedure is done by the Houston Vasectomy Clinic.
No. The man's body is his own, to do with what he wants. No spousal permission, formal or otherwise, is needed for him to have a vasectomy.
zero...
vasectomy